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Kings Highway Christian Church (also known as KHCC) was formed in 1923 by members of Shreveport's Central Christian Church, who had purchased land at the corner of Kings Highway & Line Avenue. Shortly thereafter Jewish Architect Mr. Samuel Wiener, taking inspiration from many Romanesque/Byzantine style churches in and around the City of Rome ...
Blanchard is the suburban town in, and the second-largest municipality by population of Caddo Parish in the U.S. state of Louisiana. With a population of 3,538 at the 2020 U.S. census , it is part of the Shreveport – Bossier City metropolitan statistical area .
Pages in category "Churches in Shreveport, Louisiana" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. ... St. Mark's Episcopal Church (Shreveport, Louisiana)
The major daily newspaper serving the Shreveport-Bossier and Ark-La-Tex area is The Shreveport Times. Its headquarters are located in downtown Shreveport. Other smaller non-daily newspapers. Caddo Citizen; Daily Legal News; Shreveport Sun; The Inquisitor; Bossier City is served by the daily Bossier Press-Tribune.
The work is now overseen by the elders of the Dunlap church of Christ in Dunlap, TN. The live-action children's program Digger Doug's Underground is the most notable of GBN's children's programs; it is based on the characters from the children's magazine Discovery which is produced by Apologetics Press, an Alabama-based publishing house ...
The first episode of the six-hour docuseries "The Prison Confessions of Gypsy Rose Blanchard" debuts on Lifetime at 7 p.m. Friday, Jan. 5.
Members of the church of Christ do not conceive of themselves as a new church started near the beginning of the 19th century. Rather, the whole movement is designed to reproduce in contemporary times the church originally established on Pentecost, A.D. 33. The strength of the appeal lies in the restoration of Christ's original church.
The old parish church traces its origin to the year 1902, when a group of Jesuit priests arrived in Shreveport to establish and staff a new parish and high school for boys. [4] The parish's first rector was Fr. John F. O'Connor, S.J. By 1924, building a larger church was deemed necessary for the growing congregation. [5]